3 women dead in Arlington Heights fire in 300-block of South Dunton

Three women were killed early Wednesday morning in a house fire in Arlington Heights.

November 6, 2013 8:26:08 PM PST

ABC7 Team Coverage

November 6, 2013 (ARLINGTON HEIGHTS, Ill.) --

Three women were killed early Wednesday morning in a house fire in Arlington Heights.

Investigators on Wednesday night have not officially determined how and where the fire started, but the worst of the damage appears to be here in the back of the house where part of the second floor collapsed.

On Wednesday night, the work of board-up crews is capping a day of tragedy at this two-story house where three women were found dead.

"Count your blessings. Tragic things happen to people all the time, and it's hard to witness it," said Cheryl Brown, neighbor.

The Arlington Heights Fire Department set up a command post at the scene in the 300-block of South Dunton.

There was no call to 911, instead, a police officer blocks away happened to smell the smoke.

"It was incredible. Flames shooting out of the back of the house top and bottom floor so it was obviously at the peak when I woke up. Just incredible flames," Barry Carlson, who lives nearby, said.

As flames consumed the upper floor, next door resident Jung-Fu Huang feared for his neighbors.

"When I wake up, I stepped outside and hoped they are alright. But obviously the front door is still locked," said Jung-Fu Huang, neighbor.

Authorities say the oldest victim, a 93-year-old woman, was pulled from a first floor bedroom but died at the scene. The other two female victims, ages 62 and 40, were discovered after the fire was out near the first floor entrance. It appeared they had tried to escape.

Officials have not released the names of the women who died, but neighbors say the 93-year-old victim was a longtime resident of the block and one of the other victims was likely her live-in caregiver.

"The caregiver was pretty nice. She planted tomatoes and some food, and she would always give to me," said Huang.

Fortunately, the fire did not spread to any neighboring homes. Officials say as firefighters arrived, they did not hear the sound of smoke alarms. Whether alarms were present in the home is being investigated.